"Mhmm." Really though, Jemma had Doctor Who marathons all the time. While the science fiction genre had not been the cause of her love for science, Jemma wouldn't deny that she did enjoy it. Even if half the time she ended up getting frustrated at the complete inaccuracies that weren't even plausible. At least if there was a basis for science or plausibility, it was more interesting. At least for her.
"Well, yes, it stands to reason. The problem though is that if recreation of the anomaly is possible, it will make whatever containment vanish like the one has done." She was quite interested in seeing if it were possible to recreate, but they did have to take into account the way the singularity was reacting. And since things just vanished? Well. That would be unfortunate in trying to contain it if it just vanished the containment.
Looking at where Peter was pointing, Jemma nodded some as she read over the results, lips pressed together in thought. It was statistically significant. At least at the .05 level. She'd want to test it at the .01 before being positive, though. Which admittedly wasn't used as often for these matters, but given what they were wanting to do?
"Not really... no." Which was unfortunate. She usually had a bunch of ideas, but this was beyond anything she had seen. While there were properties that showed significance, and data, replication and figuring out how it existed? Not so much. Then there was the fact that if this thing didn't close, Orange County could be in danger so she also wanted to figure out if there was a scientific way to combat it. Which meant replication.
What she wouldn't give for Fitz to be here and help.